The global food production system is inherently undemocratic. Based on shared experiences of the adverse effects, the world's citizens need to intervene as democratic publics to transform a broken system.

At one climate change conference after another, leaders of the developed democracies solemnly pledge action, then return to the gridlock of political systems with 19th-century origins.
EPA/COP20April 22, 2015

Australians are deeply cynical about both sides’ approach to climate change but especially mistrust Tony Abbott’s attitude, according to polling released by the Climate Institute on the eve of the reintroduction…

It’s 100 million years since Pangea, and we’re still waiting.
cleanbiz.asia/Cesar HeradaApril 22, 2014

It seems an anomaly that among the 15 autonomous, specialised agencies within the United Nations – such as the FAO, WMO, WHO, or UNESCO – there is no dedicated environmental organisation. This secondary…

The 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill was a tragedy, but what legacy has it left?
AAP/Bevil Knapp.March 26, 2013

It is now two and a half years since the Deepwater Horizon oil well blowout in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Both the people and the ecosystem of the Gulf were changed by this massive spill; how well…

South Australia’s wind energy per capita is higher than any major country in the world, the report said.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/twicepix/November 26, 2012

Dear reader, don’t let yourselves be fooled: whatever political charlatans, cynics or melancholics say to the contrary, democracy as we know it is turning green. There’s never been a period in the history…